| Literature DB >> 33661330 |
Alessandro Lugli1, Fatima Carneiro2,3, Heather Dawson4, Jean-François Fléjou5, Richard Kirsch6, Rachel S van der Post7, Michael Vieth8, Magali Svrcek9.
Abstract
After the defeat at the battle of Waterloo on June 18, 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte was sent into exile to the Island of St. Helena where he died 6 years later on May 5, 1821. One day after his death, Napoleon's personal physician, Dr. Francesco Antommarchi, performed the autopsy in the presence of Napoleon's exile companions and the British medical doctors. Two hundred years later, mysteries still surround the cause of his death and different hypotheses have been postulated in the medical and historical literature. The main reasons seem to be the presence of several autopsy reports, their interpretation and perhaps the greed for thrill and mystery. Therefore, for the bicentenary of Napoleon's death, an international consortium of gastrointestinal pathologists assembled to analyse Napoleon's autopsy reports based on the level of medical evidence and to investigate if the autopsy reports really do not allow a final statement.Entities:
Keywords: Autopsy report; Bicentenary; Gastric cancer; Gastritis; Napoleon
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33661330 PMCID: PMC8572813 DOI: 10.1007/s00428-021-03061-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virchows Arch ISSN: 0945-6317 Impact factor: 4.064
Overview of Napoleon’s different autopsy reports
| Author | Source | Medical evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Francesco Antommarchi (1789–1838) | Official French autopsy report published in: Montholon’s memoirs entitled “Récits de la captivité de l’empereur Napoléon à Sainte-Hélène” (Paris, 1847) Mémoires de Marchand, premier valet de chambre et éxécuteur testamentaire de l’empereur Napoléon (Paris, 1952–1955) | Antommarchi was Napoleon’s personal physician and anatomist. The autopsy report was signed on May 8, 1821 |
Thomas Shortt (1788–1843) Archibald Arnott (1772–1855) Charles Mitchell (1783–1856) Francis Burton (1784–1828) Matthew Livingstone (1773–1821) | Official British autopsy report entitled ““Report of Appearances on Dissection of the Body of Napoleon Bonaparte”. Preserved in the Lowe Papers at the British Library, London | Five British MDs who were present at the autopsy and signed the report on May 6, 1821 |
| Walter Henry (1791–1860) | Letter to Sir Hudson Lowe | Walter Henry was Assistant Surgeon and took notes during Napoleon’s autopsy. The postmortal findings were included in a letter written two years after the autopsy on September 12, 1823. |
| Henri Gatien Bertrand (1773–1844) | Cahiers de Sainte-Hélène | Bertrand was Grand Maréchal du Palais. His diary was published between in Paris in the twentieth century. |
| Louis-Etienne Saint-Denis (1788–1856) | Souvenirs du mameluck Ali sur l’empereur Napoléon | Louis-Etienne Saint-Denis (Ali) was Napoleon’s valet. He never took notes, but wrote his memoirs later in Sens, France between 1827 and 1856. His souvenirs were published in Paris in 1926. |
Summarized extracts from the first autopsy report of Francesco Antommarchi in comparison to the British autopsy report with focus on the pathological findings in Napoleon’s stomach [5–7]
| Antommarchi, May 8, 1821 | British doctors, May 6, 1821 |
|---|---|
L’adhérence de la face concave du lobe gauche du foie formait un trou du diamètre d’environ trois “lignes” dans la face antérieure de l’estomac, près de son extrémité droite. L’estomac derrière était rempli en partie d’une substance liquide, noirâtre, d’une odeur piquante et désagréable. Un ulcère cancéreux fort étendu occupait spécialement la partie supérieure de la face interne de l’estomac, et s’étendait de l’orifice du cardia jusqu’à environ un pouce du pilorum. Sur les bords de cet ulcère, vers le pilorum, le trou ci-dessus désigné, produit par corrosion ulcéreuse des parois de l’estomac. Les parois ulcéreuses de l’estomac étaient considérablement gonflées et endurcies. Entre l’ulcère et le pilorum, et contigus à l’ulcère, gonflement et dureté squirreuse de la largeur de quelques “lignes”, qui occupaient circulairement l’extrémité droite de l’estomac. | The omentum was found remarkably fat and the stomach was found the seat of extensive disease. Strong adhesions connected the whole superior surface, particularly about the pyloric extremity to the concave surface of the left lobe of the liver. An ulcer which penetrated the coats of the stomach was discovered one inch from the pylorus sufficient to allow the passage of the little finger. The internal surface of the stomach to nearly its whole extent was a mass of cancerous disease or scirrhous portions advancing to cancer, this was particularly noticed near the pylorus. The cardiac extremity for a small space near the termination of the oesophagus was the only part appearing in a healthy state. The stomach was found nearly filled with a large quantity of fluid resembling coffee grounds. |
The summary of Dr. Antommarchi’s autopsy report is exceptionally presented in French to avoid any misunderstandings and bias due to translation. For completeness, the English translation is also available at the bottom of each paragraph (*1ligne = approximately 2.256mm)